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Developed from hollow tree trunks, and used by cultures living in deforested areas, drums served as an early form of long distance communication, and were used during ceremonial and religious functions.

Contents

[edit] Types

[edit] Pressure drum

While this type of instrument can be modulated quite closely, its range is limited to a gathering or market-place, and it is primarily used in ceremonial settings. Ceremonial functions could include dance, rituals, story-telling and communication of points of order.

Some of the groups of variations of the talking drum among West African ethnic groups:

In the 20th century the talking drums have become a part of popular music in West Africa, especially in the music genres of Jùjú (Nigeria) and Mbalax (Senegal).

[edit] Slit gongs

Message drums, or more properly slit gongs, with hollow chambers and long narrow openings that resonate when struck, are larger all-wood instruments hollowed out from a single log. Variations in the thickness of the walls would vary the tones when struck by heavy wooden drum sticks. While some were simple utilitarian pieces they could also be highly elaborate works of sculpture while still retaining their function. Often there are small stands under each end of the drum to keep it off of the ground and let it vibrate more freely.

These drums were made out of hollowed logs. The bigger the log, the louder sound would be made and thus the farther it could be heard. A long slit would be cut in one side of the tree trunk. Next, the log would be hollowed out through the slit, leaving lips (wooden ledges) on each side of the opening. A drum could be tuned to produce a lower note and a higher note. For that it would need to be hollowed out more under one lip than under the other. The drum's lips are hit with sticks, beating out rhythms of high and low notes.

Under ideal conditions, the sound can be understood at 8 km (5.0 mi),[citation needed] but interesting messages usually get relayed on by the next village. "The talking drums" or "jungle drums" is also a euphemism for gossip – similar to "the grapevine".

[edit] Drum languages

In Africa, New Guinea and the tropical America, people have used drum telegraphy to communicate with each other from far away for centuries. When European expeditions came into the jungles to explore the primeval forest, they were surprised to find that the message of their coming and their intention was carried through the woods a step in advance of their arrival. An African message can be transmitted at the speed of 100 miles in an hour.[1]

Among the famous communication drums are the drums of West Africa (see talking drum). From regions known today as Nigeria and Ghana they spread across West Africa and to America and the Caribbean during the slave trade. There they were banned because they were being used by the slaves to communicate over long distances in a code unknown to their enslavers.[citation needed]

Talking drums were also used in East Africa and are described by Andreus Bauer in the 'Street of Caravans' while acting as security guard in the Wissmann Truppe for the caravan of Charles Stokes.

The traditional drumming found in Africa is actually of three different types. Firstly, a rhythm can represent an idea (or signal). Secondly it can repeat the profile of a spoken utterance or thirdly it can simply be subject to musical laws.

Drum communication methods are not languages in their own right; they are based on actual natural languages. The sounds produced are conventionalized or idiomatic signals based on speech patterns. The messages are normally very stereotyped and context-dependent. They lack the ability to form new combinations and expressions.

In central and east Africa, drum patterns represent the stresses, syllable lengths and tone of the particular African language. In tone languages, where syllables are associated with a certain tone, some words are only distinguished only by their suprasegmental profile. Therefore, syllable drum languages can often communicate a message using the tonal phonemes alone.

In certain languages, the pitch of each syllable is uniquely determined in relation to each adjacent syllable. In these cases, messages can be transmitted as rapid beats at the same speed as speech as the rhythm and melody both match the equivalent spoken utterance.

Misinterpretations can occur due to the highly ambiguous nature of the communication. This is reduced by context effects and the use of stock phrases. For example, in Jabo, most stems are monosyllabic. By using a proverb or honorary title to create expanded versions of an animal, person's name or object, the corresponding single beat can be replaced with a rhythmic and melodic motif representing the subject. In practice not all listeners understand all of the stock phrases; the drum language is understood only to the level of their immediate concern.

Some people, such as the Melanesians, extend this idea further by freely inventing signs to make up their drum signals. This is in sharp contrast to the Efik tribe of Nigeria who use notes which exactly correspond to the tones of their morphemes. Different still is the Ewe language found in Togo, where only full sentences and their combinations are translated into the drum language. No smaller units are used; a sound picture represents a whole thought. This is similar to the Tangu tribe of New Guinea, where signals represent phrases, the mnemonics of which are parts of song melodies, quasi-poetic rhythms or purely personal rhythms.

When a drum is used in speech mode, it is culturally defined and depends on the linguistic/cultural boundaries. Therefore, communication suffers from translation problems as in vocal communication. There is no single international drum language.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Davis, Ernest (23 August 2011). "Information, from drums to Wikipedia". James Gleick. The Information: A history, a theory, a flood. 526pp. Fourth Estate. 978 0 00 722573 6. The Times Literary Supplement. Archived from the original on 12 February 2012. http://www.the-tls.co.uk/tls/public/article760768.ece. Retrieved 12 February 2012. 
  • Schmidt-Jones, C. (2005, May 24). Message Drums. Connexions (licensed under CC-BY 1.0)

[edit] External links


1494 videos foundNext > 

west african drums - senegal

seattle's bumbershoot 2008 -thione & gora diop

Beating the Drums in South Africa

During our trip with Adventures by Disney we attended a private function at the Gold of Africa Museum. The group learned to play African drums and then enjoyed a great tapas style dinner and African entertainment. Check out the dancers and the gorgeous voice on the female singer!

Hot Jungle Drums And Voo Doo Rhythm 1979/disco

DC Larue - Hot Jungle Drums And Voo Doo Rhythm - my favorite disco in april 2009 ))

Africa Talking Drums

photos.africapoint.net - Talking drums of Africa

Ayan Bisi Adeleke - Master talking drummer - drum talks

Bisi playing the talking drum. Plays dundun - part 1. Plays gongon and bembe in part two. Edited on Linux with Cinelerra.

Tegma-Drums of Africa

I love this song and but I did not find it anywhere so I got the idea to make a video. Video is nothing special, but it is the only way for me to introduce this very good song. I hope that....Mr. Tegma will not be angry because of this. Enjoy :)

The Clebanoff Strings - Jungle Drums

The Clebanoff Strings were created by the Russian born Herman Clebanoff (who emigrated to the US at a young age). At the end of the sixties decade several fabulous albums were issued - many of them having latin american music as a central theme. Here you can listen to a fine arrangement of Ernesto Lecuona's "Jungle drums". Lecuano - who composed more than 600 melodies (eg "Siboney", "Always in my heart" etc...) was a Cuban musician with many talents. He was a great pianist and the initiator of the "Lecuona Cuban Boys" - a band that performed his music all over the world. In all his compositions the melody always came 'first' - and this is no different in his "Jungle drums". Enjoy !

Drum music - Talking Drums by Ariel Kalma

www.music-mosaic.com Drum music at its best! Tuned low drums and dumbek mark the beat of the earth while log drums and kanjera Indian tambourines joyfully dance around this drum music. iTunes download: itunes.apple.com And other digital stores.

Communication Breakdown, Drum Cover

easy enough but a classic

Kinka: Alokli West African Drums

Performance at Swarthmore U, Philadelphia 4/24/09. Kinka is social music popular among the Ewes of West Africa. It is also the perfect music to play while the audience is filing in (studies show they will sit down 17% faster than if you play elevator music). The drum language can get a bit racy but the songs are political, calling for things like justice, good behavior and protesting corruption & greed. The community will normally sing & dance along with this very danceable music. One thing you can see clearly in Kinka is drum dialogs. The master drum calls out questions and the supporting drum must answer correctly. There are hundreds of dialogs so each performance can feel spontaneous, and the lead drum can respond to particular songs or dance styles.

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